The story was quickly picked up by the media and a Google search on “Dhoby Ghaut doll” brings up the following image:

What’s interesting about the way the ‘Dollby Ghaut’ story was carried is that Channelnewsasia (CNA) did not use the word creepy or eerie in their headline, even though the word eerie appeared in the first line of their story.

CNA should have just said it was eerie in their headline, because it was!

The bigger question is: how did the creepy doll get on the track in the first place?

We hope to get an answer from SMRT soon, as their Vice-President of Corporate Information and Communications Patrick Nathan told CNA: “We have recovered the doll and are investigating.”

But here’s what we think could have possibly happened:

Technicians working the midnight shift found it on the track and left the doll to rest so they could finish track maintenance on time for the morning crowd.

One MRT technician obviously loves dolls and left one to be photographed to be a famous social media influencer

Russell Lee has an experiment for a new book on doll ghosts

SMRT left the doll there so there would be distractions from its delay issues (Read Sun Tzu’s Art of War)